Manifesting America

The Imperial Construction of U.S. National Space

Mark Rifkin

Establishes self-determination (particularly for indigenous peoples) a key concept within American Studies.

Focuses on the confrontation between ways of understanding politics and land tenure and how U.S. policy finesses those distinctions/disjunctions.

Will appeal across a wide range of areas, including: American Studies, Native American Studies/ Indigenous Studies, 19th Century American literary studies, U.S. legal studies (particularly the 19th C), Postcolonial studies, and Chicano/a studies

Manifesting America

The Imperial Construction of U.S. National Space

Mark Rifkin

Description

In Manifesting America, Mark Rifkin explores how writings by Native Americans and former Mexicans challenge the legal narratives that normalize their absorption into U.S. national space. Demonstrating how the creation and extension of U.S. jurisdiction in the antebellum period functions as an imperial system, the book focuses on Indian removal in the southeast and western Great Lakes regions as well as the annexation of Texas and California. It tracks the confrontation between U.S. law and the self-representations of once-alien peoples subjected to it, showing how U.S. institutions legitimize conquest as consensual by creating forms of official recognition for dominated groups that reinforce the obviousness of U.S. mappings. However, these mappings remain haunted and disturbed by the persistence of the political geographies of indigenous and Mexican peoples made domestic in the process of national expansion. Examining a variety of nonfictional writings (including memorials, autobiographies, and histories) produced by imperially displaced populations, Rifkin illustrates how these texts contest the terms and dynamics of U.S. policy, indexing specific forms of collectivity and placemaking disavowed in official accounts.

Manifesting America

The Imperial Construction of U.S. National Space

Mark Rifkin

Table of Contents

IntroductionSelf-Determination, Subaltern Studies, and the Critical Remapping of U.S. Empire 1: Representing the Cherokee Nation: Imperial Power and Elite Interests in the Remaking of Cherokee Governance 2: The Territoriality of Tradition: Treaties, Hunting Grounds, and Prophecy in Black Hawk's Narrative 3: Comanche Metaphors: Juan Seguín's Memoirs and the Figure of the Barbarian in the Struggle for Texas 4: Partial Citizens and Insurgent Masses: Narrating Violence Past and Present in Post-1848 CaliforniaIndex

Manifesting America

The Imperial Construction of U.S. National Space

Mark Rifkin

Author Information

Mark Rifkin, Assistant Professor, University of North Carolina

Manifesting America

The Imperial Construction of U.S. National Space

Mark Rifkin

Reviews and Awards

"Manifesting America is an important innovative work that will provoke argument and inspire emulation. Each chapter is compelling and rich in its interweaving of textual readings, history, and theory." - Amy Kaplan, University of Pennsylvania

"These steady-handed, often tough-minded readings document a genealogy of the interconnections between American Indian and Mexican-American experiences of American imperialism. Drawing on subaltern studies to great intellectual advantage, Mark Rifkin in Manifesting America innovates, re-imagines, and creates new pathways toward including indigeneity in American studies." - Robert Warrior, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

"Manifesting America skillfully reorients American studies from its current fascination with the transnational, spotlighting instead processes through which the U.S. incorporated Indigenous and Mexican peoples and their lands into its national imaginary. Rifkin's attention to this discursive naturalization of U.S. authority as non-coercive reinvigorates the critique of empire-building at home." - Chadwick Allen, The Ohio State University

"Rifkin's study offers a critical genealogy of the dialectic of incorporation and acquiescence that persists as a central element of U.S. imperial nationalism. This path-breaking study will be widely read and discussed by scholars in American history, Native American studies, and American literary studies." - Donald E. Pease, Dartmouth College

"Compels us to think carefully of the rhetorical and legal legerdemain of imperial conquest and the centrality of language in the making of the United States as a hegemonic power." - Southwestern Historical Quarterly